Vella Veronica, De Francesco Ernestina Marianna, Lappano Rosamaria, Muoio Maria Grazia, Manzella Livia, Maggiolini Marcello, Belfiore Antonino
Endocrinology, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Catania, Garibaldi-Nesima Hospital, Catania, Italy.
Department of Pharmacy, Health and Nutritional Sciences, University of Calabria, Rende, Italy.
Front Cell Dev Biol. 2020 Dec 8;8:608412. doi: 10.3389/fcell.2020.608412. eCollection 2020.
The development and progression of the great majority of breast cancers (BCs) are mainly dependent on the biological action elicited by estrogens through the classical estrogen receptor (ER), as well as the alternate receptor named G-protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER). In addition to estrogens, other hormones and growth factors, including the insulin and insulin-like growth factor system (IIGFs), play a role in BC. IIGFs cooperates with estrogen signaling to generate a multilevel cross-communication that ultimately facilitates the transition toward aggressive and life-threatening BC phenotypes. In this regard, the majority of BC deaths are correlated with the formation of metastatic lesions at distant sites. A thorough scrutiny of the biological and biochemical events orchestrating metastasis formation and dissemination has shown that virtually all cell types within the tumor microenvironment work closely with BC cells to seed cancerous units at distant sites. By establishing an intricate scheme of paracrine interactions that lead to the expression of genes involved in metastasis initiation, progression, and virulence, the cross-talk between BC cells and the surrounding microenvironmental components does dictate tumor fate and patients' prognosis. Following (i) a description of the main microenvironmental events prompting BC metastases and (ii) a concise overview of estrogen and the IIGFs signaling and their major regulatory functions in BC, here we provide a comprehensive analysis of the most recent findings on the role of these transduction pathways toward metastatic dissemination. In particular, we focused our attention on the main microenvironmental targets of the estrogen-IIGFs interplay, and we recapitulated relevant molecular nodes that orientate shared biological responses fostering the metastatic program. On the basis of available studies, we propose that a functional cross-talk between estrogens and IIGFs, by affecting the BC microenvironment, may contribute to the metastatic process and may be regarded as a novel target for combination therapies aimed at preventing the metastatic evolution.
绝大多数乳腺癌(BC)的发生和发展主要依赖于雌激素通过经典雌激素受体(ER)以及名为G蛋白偶联雌激素受体(GPER)的替代受体引发的生物学作用。除雌激素外,其他激素和生长因子,包括胰岛素和胰岛素样生长因子系统(IIGFs),也在乳腺癌中发挥作用。IIGFs与雌激素信号协同作用,产生多层次的交叉通讯,最终促进向侵袭性和危及生命的乳腺癌表型转变。在这方面,大多数乳腺癌死亡与远处转移病灶的形成相关。对协调转移形成和扩散的生物学和生化事件进行的深入研究表明,肿瘤微环境中的几乎所有细胞类型都与乳腺癌细胞密切合作,在远处播散癌性单元。通过建立导致参与转移起始、进展和毒性的基因表达的复杂旁分泌相互作用机制,乳腺癌细胞与周围微环境成分之间的相互作用确实决定了肿瘤的命运和患者的预后。在(i)描述促使乳腺癌转移的主要微环境事件以及(ii)简要概述雌激素和IIGFs信号及其在乳腺癌中的主要调节功能之后,我们在此对这些转导途径在转移扩散中的作用的最新发现进行全面分析。特别是,我们将注意力集中在雌激素-IIGFs相互作用的主要微环境靶点上,并概括了引导促进转移程序的共同生物学反应的相关分子节点。根据现有研究,我们提出雌激素和IIGFs之间的功能性相互作用通过影响乳腺癌微环境,可能有助于转移过程,并且可被视为旨在预防转移进展的联合治疗的新靶点。